Dimensional growth and extracellular matrix accumulation by neonatal rat mandibular condyles in long-term culture

Abstract
Mandibular condyles in organ culture commonly have been used as a model system for examination of the factors that influence skeletal growth and development. The work reported here complements previously published histological studies by providing quantitative temporal information on growth and matrix accumulation. Condyles maintained for as long as 5 weeks in serum‐free and 1% serum‐supplemented culture media were found to remain viable and metabolically active as demonstrated by continued dimensional growth as well as cell and matrix accumulation. Growth occurred by a combination of cell proliferation, matrix synthesis and accumulation, and cell hypertrophy (with the latter two mechanisms dominating). Increase in tissue volume correlated directly with increased glycosaminoglycan content; both increased 7‐fold over 5 weeks. In comparison with serum‐free culture, after 35 days in medium containing 1% serum, glycosaminoglycan content was 24% lower and collagen content was 36% higher, whereas dry weight, condyle length, and DNA content were not significantly different; in addition, histological observation suggested that, for samples cultured with serum, chondrogenic phenotype had been lost from some regions. The temporal behavior for all growth parameters exhibited a transient phase 1–2 weeks in duration followed by a steady‐state period in which dimenssions and tissue constituents or content increased at a constant or near constant rate. Comparison of the rates of incorporation of [35S]sulfate with glycosaminoglycan content in serum‐free cultures suggests that the loss of glycosaminoglycan occurs only initially or is negligible; therefore, under these baseline conditions, cartilage glycosaminoglycan content reflects the biosynthetic rate. The high degree of reproducibility seen during steady‐state growth suggests that these data provide reliable baseline information and further supports the notion that this model system is useful for investigation of the effects of specific physical factors on in vitro growth and development.